It was a lot of work :). I knew making it usable by others would be as much work as writing it in the first place.
It's definitely not fire and forget. I've been using it for over 4 years so I don't have any plans on ditching it. The main point of documenting it was so others would use it and I can improve on the library.
If you look at another one of my libraries on github (https://github.com/jmathai/twitter-async/issues) you'll see that there have been over 90 issues raised by others which I've resolved. It's what's made that library so solid - hoping for the same here.
If I can find the time (fairly big if) I promise you that I will go through your code to see if I can either see things that you might improve or spot lurking bugs.
Much appreciated. As far as a roadmap it'll probably continue to be what it's been. The next thing on the list are unit tests but otherwise it's whatever I or others using it feel the framework is missing (but wouldn't add bloat).
It's definitely not fire and forget. I've been using it for over 4 years so I don't have any plans on ditching it. The main point of documenting it was so others would use it and I can improve on the library.
If you look at another one of my libraries on github (https://github.com/jmathai/twitter-async/issues) you'll see that there have been over 90 issues raised by others which I've resolved. It's what's made that library so solid - hoping for the same here.